Thursday, October 1, 2015

Twice I have spent some time in
Canterbury. Both, when I was there, were more triumphal parades than
pilgrimage, because of course everything was about me. The first was in the early 1990s as a part of
what I remember as the “Weasel’s Luck
Victory Tour”, the second a few years later, my circumstances heightened,
improved, and (I thought, even more arrogantly) changed entirely and for the
better. Visiting and re-visiting is an
odd form of pilgrimage, I think: your mind gathers anticipation, the
experience, and the memory of the first visit into the anticipation of the
second, and it becomes very much like Wordsworth records his experience of
Tintern Abbey in the famous poem:

These beauteous
forms,

Through a long
absence, have not been to me

As is a
landscape to a blind man’s eye:

But oft, in
lonely rooms, and ‘mid the din

Of towns and
cities, I have owed to them

In hours of
weariness, sensations sweet,

Felt in the
blood, and felt along the heart;

And passing even
into my purer mind,

With tranquil
restoration:—feelings too

Of unremembered
pleasure: such, perhaps,

As have no
slight or trivial influence

On that best
portion of a good man’s life,

His little,
nameless, unremembered, acts

Of kindness and of
love.

These lines I have always taken to be the poet’s take not only on how
nature heals and cures you, but also of how memories, seen and unseen,
deep-buried to where you can scarcely summon them, continue to shape and define
your days like a form of imaginative karma.
And so it was that two trips to one of the most revered sites of
pilgrimage, spaced only a few years apart, shape me these days as I come to the
place for a third time—this time entirely in memory and reconfiguration. I
discover new lessons in those old journeys, and how a pilgrimage might shift
and move within your thoughts until it is equally immediate, equally vivid, but
meaning altogether something different from what you had expected it would
mean.

Let me begin with the second time there.
It was, in many ways, a marked improvement over the first. I was years wiser, had ended a bad marriage
and embarked on a second that, to this day, remains the best journey I have
taken. I was riding the crest of my most
critically successful book, Arcady,
and was literally commuting to London, where I dined with editors and relaxed
into seeing the London I had wanted to see on the first trip. Canterbury was a tranquil spot after these
hectic days, and we had a room that overlooked the cathedral close, so that the
mornings were peaceful as well, and quietly beautiful, the soft, glassy ringing
of bottles unloaded on doorsteps by the milkman, and the bells beginning at a
courteous hour, when the sun was fully up and we were, too, on our way to visit
the pedestrian-friendly streets around the cathedral.

We saw the Cathedral, and I remembered a special fascination with the
tomb of Edward the Black Prince, whose very militant Christian tomb was undermined
by the mourning faces of “green men”—Celtic vegetation spirits whose presence
on Edward’s catafalque were touching and at the same time rather funny, even
though they seem to weep over his death.

A death, by the way, that arrived a bit too soon. Edward ruled as the longest Crown Prince in
British history: serving ably, at times even brilliantly, commander in
victories over France in Crécy and Poitiers, he died a year before his father, and for all
his service, for all his place in the line of succession, never became
king. Perhaps the sculptor who carved
the green men did so not only in a spirit of mourning, but also in an awareness
of the rich irony of things.

For the time of the green men was over.
No doubt they never saw it coming.
They receded to forests, to moonlit crossroads, to catafalques where
they teased the One True Faith of the Black Prince with their leafy presence.

But theirs was not the only cultural subversion I saw in Canterbury. High on one of the arches is unobtrusively
carved a naked woman in a rather compromised posture. The story goes that the carving was the
sculptor’s revenge for having been stiffed in payment. Or so David Mitchell told me.

Yes, the David Mitchell. Cloud
Atlas, The Bone Clocks, among a
number of brilliant books. One of
Britain’s visionary young novelists, who is no doubt headed for literary
immortality as I write this. He was
“Dave” to me, though, on my first trip to Canterbury, where he was a clerk at
Waterstone’s, to whom I happened to mention that one of my books was sitting on
the shelf not that far from the cash register.

Photo by Kubik. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/

His reaction was charming. Polite,
engaged, initially a little nervous. It
was flattering, but at that time in my career, a few people were familiar with
my books (mostly Dragonlance readers, who tended to see me as a minor
celebrity, whether they liked or hated my work, and it was one or the other
back then). So I was used to a little
deference, the slightest star-struck demeanor, though it now happens less than
once in a couple of years, and I am always astonished when it does these

days. I talked to Dave briefly, and then
he asked me to join him for dinner and some beers with several of his graduate
school friends from the University of Kent.
He was nice and gracious and very, very smart, so it seemed like a fun
possibility.

I joined Dave, then, and his friends Matt and Martine, for a graduate
school fare of beer and pizza, and for happy conversation that lasted into the
late hours. I remember being flattered
by their attentions—partly because being regarded as a professional novelist
was new to me, and also because at home, the full-time faculty and the graduate
students I brushed against in the university were dismissive of fantasy
fiction, and it was the first group of academics who seemed to believe I had
street cred.

All in all, it was a friendly encounter with some good college kids. Matt and Martine seemed to be a couple, and
Dave spoke lovingly of his girlfriend in Japan.
We parted happy to have met each other: Dave and I both agreed that our
chance meeting and hours together had been the highlight of our summer. We would correspond briefly after I returned
to the States, but like 99% of overseas encounters, we lost touch after an
exchange of a couple of notes.

Until, of course, I made the connection between the ardent, bright
student and the novelist he had become.
And for a few days at first I was, I hate to admit, a green leafy face
of envy.

You see, David Mitchell has my job.
The one I had in mind for myself years ago. A serious writer (and by any definition he is
that) and one who has been able to make more than a living from his work. A house in Ireland, a way of life that seemed
to me glamorous when I began to write, and still has an enticing gleam to it as
I write this.

But it never happened with me. Thirteen
novels now, some well-reviewed, but farther from making a living than seemed
possible when that first book, Weasel’s Luck, was released to sales I never
expected, even in my pipe dreams. By the standards I set for myself almost
thirty years ago I’m a failure: mid-shelf writer, untenured professor subject annually
to the budgetary whims of a finance-strapped university, passed over for
promotions on several occasions. Was I not smart enough? I ask myself. Not talented
enough? Too lazy? Unlucky in where I grew up? Unwise in my professional choices? Probably yes to all of these questions.

So much for the visions of a young man—how the life turns from what you
thought it would be to what it is. I
think that if any of us looked back thirty years, dredging up the images of our
ambition (“What will you be like 30 years from now?”), we all aim high.

But we’re aiming at the wrong thing.
Notice I said that my envy lasted “for a few days.” After which, I faced some hard truths.

David Mitchell’s artistry and hard work have won a deserving place in
life. Something in myself or my
circumstances gave me my road, my station today as a writer. And what is important is the process of
delight in the work: I still love putting words on the page, teaching students
in a classroom. And if that work goes
unacknowledged, that’s not what is important finally. If you’re the Black Prince and not a king,
there’s more than enough glory in your battles and your victories. If you’re not a prince but a feudal peasant,
same rules apply: your battles and victories remain your own, so fight the good
fight and enjoy the combat—physical, mental, imaginative, spiritual, no matter
the terrain. At one level the green men’s
presence may mock you, but at that level they mock us all: in the passage of
years all works vanish, and I realize it’s up to me to do the work given me, to
do it when and where it matters.

I never stopped wishing David all the goodness he seemed and seems to
deserve. I celebrate him and his next
novel. I know the forest beckons, that
eventually all green men go back and hide, but I’m in this goodly light for a
while to come.